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Conmatest 1

The document discusses engineering materials and their properties. It begins by introducing engineering materials and their importance for civil engineers. It then classifies materials based on their chemical composition, occurrence, manufacturing process, structure, and use. Common groups are metals, ceramics, polymers, composites, and advanced materials. The document proceeds to describe various physical properties including density, porosity, strength, and thermal properties. It concludes by explaining mechanical properties such as stress, strain, modulus of elasticity, yield point, and strain hardening.

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Ian Bondoc
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
50 views20 pages

Conmatest 1

The document discusses engineering materials and their properties. It begins by introducing engineering materials and their importance for civil engineers. It then classifies materials based on their chemical composition, occurrence, manufacturing process, structure, and use. Common groups are metals, ceramics, polymers, composites, and advanced materials. The document proceeds to describe various physical properties including density, porosity, strength, and thermal properties. It concludes by explaining mechanical properties such as stress, strain, modulus of elasticity, yield point, and strain hardening.

Uploaded by

Ian Bondoc
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CONMATEST

Introduction
The engineering structures are composed of materials. These
materials are known as the engineering materials or building
materials or materials of construction. It is necessary for the civil
engineer to become conversant with the properties of such materials.
The service conditions of buildings demand a wide range of materials
and various properties such as water resistance, strength, durability,
temperature resistance, appearance, permeability, etc. are to be
properly studied before making final selection of any building
material for a particular use.
Classification of Engineering Material
The factors which form the basis of various systems of classifications
of materials in material science and engineering are:
• the chemical composition of the material
• the mode of the occurrence of the material in the nature
• the refining and the manufacturing process to which the
material is subjected prior it acquires the required properties
• the atomic and crystalline structure of material
• the industrial and technical use of the material.
Classification of Engineering Material
Common engineering materials that falls within the scope of
material science and engineering may be classified into one of the
following six groups:
(i) Metals (ferrous and non-ferrous) and alloys
(ii) Ceramics
(iii) Polymers
(iv) Composites
(v) Advanced Materials
Properties of Engineering Materials
1- Physical properties:
Density, specific gravity, porosity, water absorption, etc....
2- Mechanical properties
Tensile strength, compressive strength, rigidity, hardness, creep,
fatigue etc.
3- Thermal properties:
Thermal conductivity, thermal expansion and other.......
Properties of Engineering Materials
4- Chemical properties:
Resistance to acids, alkalis, brines and oxidation.
5- Economic characteristics:
Cost savings
6- Aesthetic properties:
Color, surface smoothness, the reflection of light…
Physical Properties
Density is defined as mass per unit volume for a material.
Unit weight is the ratio of material weight to material volume.
Porosity is the ratio of the volume of the spaces in the material to the over all
volume.
Voids ratio is the ratio between the size of voids to the volume of solid material.
Water absorption denotes the ability of the material to absorb and retain water. It is
expressed as percentage in weight or of the volume of dry material.
Weathering resistance is the ability of a material to endure alternate wet and dry
conditions for a long period without considerable deformation and loss of
mechanical strength.
Physical Properties
Water permeability is the capacity of a material to allow water to
penetrate under pressure. Materials like glass, steel and bitumen are
impervious.
Frost Resistance denotes the ability of a water-saturated material to
endure repeated freezing and thawing with considerable decrease of
mechanical strength. Under such conditions the water contained by
the pores increases in volume even up to 9 percent on freezing.
Mechanical Properties
The properties which relate to material behavior
under applied forces define as mechanical properties.
The common mechanical properties: Tensile strength,
compressive strength, rigidity, hardness, creep,
fatigue ...... etc.
Mechanical Properties
Strength is the ability of the material to resist failure under the action of stresses caused by
loads
Stress is the applied force P divided by the original area.
There are several types of stress which depend on types of applied load. These stresses can
be classified as:
1- Compression stress
2- Tension stress
3- Shear stress
4- Bending stress
5- Torsion stress
When bar is stretched, stresses are tensile (taken to be positive)
If forces are reversed, stresses are compressive (negative)
Strain (ε) is the change in length δ divided by the original length

When bar is elongated, strains are tensile (positive).


When bar shortens, strains are compressive (negative).
Mechanical Properties
The Poisson Effect. A positive (tensile) strain in one direction will also
contribute a negative (compressive) strain in the other direction, just as
stretching a rubber band to make it longer in one direction makes it thinner in
the other directions.
◦ The ratio of lateral strain of material to axial strain within elastic limit define
as Poisson’s ratio.
Mechanical Properties
Stress – Strain Relationship. The relation between stress and strain is
an extremely important measure of a material’s mechanical
properties. Stress - strain curve is graphical representation of it.
The proportional limit
Up to the proportional limit for the material, the graph is a straight line and so
the stress is proportional to elastic strain and Hooke’s Law applies.
Mechanical Properties
Hooke’s Law. Within the elastic region of the stress-strain diagram, stress is linearly proportional
to strain (up to proportional limit).
Modulus of Elasticity or Young's Modulus
It is the slope of the initial linear portion of the stress-strain diagram. In other words it is the
ratio of stress to elastic strain.
Tangent Modulus
It is the slope of the stress-strain curve above the proportional limit. In other words it is the ratio
of stress to strain above the proportional limit. There is no single value for the tangent modulus;
it varies with strain.
Mechanical Properties
Shear Modulus the modulus of rigidity is the slope of the initial linear portion of the shear
stress-strain diagram. In other words it is the ratio of shear stress to elastic shear strain
The Elastic Limit It is the point after which the sample will not return to its original shape
when the load is released
Yield Point. It is the point after which the sample will not return to its original
shape when the load is released

- After yield point, the material behaves plastically(when the load is removed, the sample does
not return to its original shape)
◦ The Strain-Hardening After the yield point, there may be a region of where
increased load is necessary for increased deformation, This is the strain-
hardening region
◦ Ultimate strength Load (stress) rises to a maximum; this is the ultimate
strength of the material
◦ Failure point Load required for further deformation is reduced as the failure
or breaking point is approached.

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